Your definition wasn't applicable because mijo was asking about Dawkins use of the word which is a word used in response to creationist obfuscation.
The title of the thread says it all.
I understand that evolution is a process directed through natural selection, but, as I understand it, natural selection is based on the probability, not certainty, of an organism with a specific "fitness complement" (i.e., the set of genes that contribute to its survival and reproduction relative to others of the same species).
<snip>
I only ask this, because I am thoroughly disappointed in the evidence that I have received from the posters in
this thread.
No-one to my knowledge has either explained how a process that operates on probability is non-random or directed me toward a resource that does.
They all seem to be more interested, as is most of the literature on the internet that doesn't specifically deal with non-random genetic processes such as mutation and unequal cross over,
in refuting the creationist straw man that holds that organisms in their current state are far too complex to have arisen by chance.
This proves that mijo was SPECIFICALLY NOT asking about Dawkins' description, which is ADMITTED EVEN BY YOU not to be directed to the technically or scientifically minded individual, but to the general public WITH THE SPECIFIC INTENT TO ADDRESS THE CREATIONIST "RANDOM" STRAWMAN. Don't make me go find your exact quotes; I will if you insist, but the longer you keep this up, the more you piss me off.
There is no question about this, there is no doubt, it is there in plain English, for all to see. You have specifically and repeatedly (for over thirty pages!!!) ignored this obvious fact, and managed to piss me off pretty seriously in doing so. You have wronged mijo, and refuse to admit it, and you are arguing for the sake of arguing, twisting words, and ignoring anything you don't want to hear. It is a rather unpleasant spectacle to watch, and now you have placed words I did not say in my mouth and directly insulted me in so doing.
Moreover, you said that I said evolution is non-random... I didn't say that...
OK, here we go:
We have told you how evolution is not random.
If you don't understand how evolution is not random<snip>Evolution is NOT random<snip>Evolution of life is not random
The last one is three times in a single post. Do I need to go on? You DID say that, in as many words, many times.
And you made the claim that there was one definition of random and didn't provide any evidence of that being the case.
Actually, I provided two long posts full of evidence, all of which you ignored using precisely the same type of sophistry you are using here.
Moreover, I pointed out a physics definition that pretty much said nothing is "truly random".
No, you didn't provide a
physics definition; you provided a
definition by a physicist writing for a non-technical audience, a far different thing. And more sophistry.
It's clear that random is an ambiguous word.
It's clear that you've confused your audience with children who are unsophisticated enough to believe that. Presented with ample proof that there is in fact a single well-accepted scientific definition, and a far less specific common definition, and that the audience you were talking to is and was using the scientific definition and not the common one, you have nevertheless confounded the two and pretended that the scientific one doesn't exist, or is somehow not "informative" despite being presented with overwhelming evidence that this is not the case.
And if you use it to describe evolution in general or to sum up natural selection--which is a 2-part system--you are being vague in the same way creationists are vague.
Only if I use the common definition; and I never have, and you have never admitted that. Nor has mijo, at least not on this thread. You are confusing two definitions; as I have repeatedly stated, you don't seem to know the difference between them. While this is only semi-serious, it is also a pointer to a fundamental dishonesty on your part, that you are using to "prove" your point. I don't accept sophistry as proof, and I don't think anyone else should either.
This the only reason that biologists go out of their way to discriminate the relative randomness of the information exchange from the non-random selection of the organism it produces. The Dawkins tape is clear. Mijo's question in the OP was answered. You and he can insist that Dawkins is wrong or replying to the wrong definition-- or that by your definition (which you keep claiming is the only one--without providing evidence or even a definition) evolution is a random process. Maybe so...but that is vague. If everything that contains random components IS random--then Algebra IS random and so is artificial selection and so is the nozzle example.
Of course they are- and they are also ordered. Not disordered, which is what I proposed you use instead of not random, which you were repeating with alarming regularity, many, many pages ago.
No one is insisting Dawkins is wrong; merely that he is talking for an unsophisticated audience. What we're insisting on is that the current audience is not unsophisticated.
Mijo's question in the OP was NOT answered, has not been answered, and cannot be answered; by the definition he makes it clear he is using IN THE OP, as demonstrated by the quotes from the OP I reproduced above, evolution IS random. Ordered; stochastic; but driven by RANDOM events in the environment, acting on RANDOM combinations of genes. At the individual level, evolution is and always must be random. You might argue that evolution does not exist at the individual level; and I might listen to that argument, and eventually agree based on that that evolution is, in fact, not random. But you have not presented that argument. Instead, you have descended to sophistry and dishonesty. See above; "I never said evolution is not random."
I was not behaving badly. You were. You kept hearing me say something I never said, and ignored all parts where I said, "YES randomness is important"--you just underplayed the part about "natural selection" being much less so.
You said something over and over, and then claimed you had not said it (and are still claiming you did not). I provided proof of my assertions, and you ignored it. I tried to give you honorable ways to acknowledge the truth of what I said, and you ignored that too. If that's not behaving badly, I don't know what is.
And I just kept answering the OP--most scientists consider "natural selection" to be the answer to the OP. The Dawkins clip goes into detail much better than I did.
You did not answer it, you have not answered it, and you cannot answer it. Its very content makes it clear that you are answering a different question than is being asked, and refusing to acknowledge that it is different.
Information changes relatively randomly. Natural Selection can't see the information to select it unless it creates a change to the phenotype. That's the bottom line. None of Mijo's definitions gets it--and you may not either.
Natural selection is based on a randomly changing fitness landscape, which is dependent upon natural events that are affected by the species in question, natural events that are affected by other species, and natural events that are unconnected to any species. The last two are, with respect to a particular genome, effectively random; when a large asteroid will hit the Earth, or when another species will adapt to a particular adaptation that the current species has developed to obtain food or avoid predation, for two of the most obvious examples. That fitness landscapes change randomly, at least with respect to the genome, is unquestioned in the literature. The criteria of selection, therefore, change randomly, and the genome also changes randomly. What is really interesting about this system is that it produces such elegant results; but you cannot deny that it is random.
And another insult. Tell me again how you're not behaving badly.
But I think anyone can listen to the Dawkins clip and understand him clearly where as mijo just keeps saying "evolution is random because it can be described by a probability chart." What can't? Doesn't that make loaded dices random? Where is this vague definitiion used in the sciences? You keep claiming there is a singular scientific definition and every single scientist I've been able to talk to about this says you're "full of it"--the term is ambiguous for many reasons.
Since you obviously haven't read my previous posts, or if you did you didn't understand them, I will refer you back to them. If you have specific questions about how they are applicable, please feel free to ask- but until you show that you have read them and understood at least some of them, I have no intention of wasting further time reproducing the arguments. You didn't read them then; why should I believe you will read them now? And that makes it a waste of time.
You are asking all scientists to conclude that Dawkins is explaining it wrong while not considering his audience nor offering anything near as descriptive or understandable?
But his audience there is not scientists; it is popular media, intended for the consumption of the reasonably well educated, not the consumption of other scientists, or even the heavily educated. And that is precisely what I have been saying for many posts now. And precisely what you have been ignoring for an equal amount of time.
In any case you agree that the componets that affect natural selection (everything in the physical environment that acts on an environment) is not the same kind of "randomness" used when discussing mutation.
I agree to nothing of the kind. The fitness landscape varies randomly; the genome varies randomly. Both acting together produce wonderful adaptations. Order emerges. But that order is not present in any of the components; that is the nature of emergent order. That this sort of randomness can result in such order is truly the most amazing part of it all, but by denying the randomness of the underpinnings, you deny that wonderfulness. It's not surprising, says you; it's not wonderful. It's inevitable. Well, you may be right about that- Stuart Kauffman certainly agrees that it's inevitable. But he doesn't agree it's not wonderful, and beautiful, to see such order emerge spontaneously from the underlying chaos- and neither do I.
So what exactly is your answer to the OP.
My answer is, there is no evidence for evolution being non-random- and there is no evidence for evolution being disorderly, either. It is order emerging from chaos- the very essence of the thing. Just as the order of thermodynamics emerges smoothly and naturally from the chaos of quantum mechanics. Just as the order of a mountain range emerges from the random kneadings of the Sun and Moon, and the random swirlings of convection in the mantle. Just as the order of life emerges from the random pounding of the waves and the tides at the edge of the ocean. Just as the order of intelligence arises from the random firing of neurons.
And to whom is Dawkins wrong or not explanatory to other than you and mijo (I provided a clip and quotes from him).
He's not wrong- just simple. He's not explanatory of the amazing emergence of the order of life we see around us from the underlying chaos of random genetic changes and random fitness landscapes- but he's not trying to be. It's you who insists that it's not random- not him. He's just explaining it for everyone. Sit down and talk to him, and if you know about emergent order, and fitness landscapes, and molecular biology, I expect he'd probably agree with what I've said. But that's not who he's talking to on TV, nor in popular science books. He's fighting the good fight there, and I respect him for it- but I don't make the unwarranted assumption, as you do, that that's all there is to the story.
And what do you propose as a better definition.
See above.
And does anyone find it a clearer way to explain the natual selection component?
Mijo seems to- and so do jimbob and Meadmaker. We'll see about cyborg.
More to the point, do I recommend trying to explain this to everyone? Not really. Most people aren't interested enough to bother. For them, "evolution is not random" is probably sufficient. If they're interested to ask more, then perhaps you should go into it- then again, perhaps not. It might be better to ask, "Well, what precisely do you mean by 'random?'" And depending on the answer, you might educate them a bit on what random means. It's a matter of judging your audience. Which I say you have done a particularly bad job of here.
But I'm just repeating myself. I've said all that already, more than once.
I thought you weenied out of the conversatin because you accused me of saying something I never said (I never said evolution was "non-random"--I just said that calling the whole thing random was vague--like calling algebra random because it contains random variables.)
No, when you denied that you had said "evolution is not random," and I looked at the quotes I have reproduced above, and they are not as far as I recall the only ones, just the first five or six I found in a quick search of this thread, I decided that you were not being reasonable any more, and I don't waste much time on unreasonable people.
Are you arguing that it's informative to call evolution random.
Depending on the audience, yes, I am. You need to check what they mean by "random," and be alert for the strawman, but given an audience that "gets it," I think it's far more informative than saying "evolution is not random" to an audience that obviously knows you're wrong over and over like it means something.
Are you arguing that it's informative to call natural selection a "random process".
See immediately above.
Doesn't that make the evolution of everything a random process?
Yes, it does. Interesting, isn't it? Take a hard look around you- EVERYTHING is random. But it's also orderly. Isn't that interesting? Doesn't that look like the operation of a few simple principles on a few simple components to create amazing complexity and order? With all this order springing up for free, isn't it stupid to attribute it to some supernatural entity? Isn't that actually
denying how wonderful and interesting our world really is? Isn't that leading straight down to the question, "where did all the order come from?" You better have an answer for that one; if you don't the cretinists are going to bury you.
Doesn't that make it vague and a poor definition?
Not particularly; it explains a hell of a lot more than evolution, in case you hadn't noticed. It's a much more satisfying and systematic explanation for things. You want to go at it piecemeal; I'm after the whole enchilada. You want to counter the cretinists; I'm after the whole religion thing. Cretinists are just a small part of that. They're some of the loudest and most irritating parts of it; but never forget who and what you're dealing with here. Pulling leaves off is a waste of time; try ripping it right out by the roots. That's what I'm after, and you're up my nose about it.
Doesn't that fit right in with Behe and the common creationist conundrum that "science thinks this all happened by chance"-- We don't think that. Even if you do or can't define the difference between that and what biologists actually know about the process.
Ahhhh, but you see, the fact is, we DO think it all happened by chance. Not that that's the first thing to say; and that mistake's already been made. As I've said repeatedly on this thread,
most people don't understand what random really means. They think that random is random, top to bottom. They don't look around them and see random turning into orderly as you move from level to level- they're not even sure there IS any level but the one they see directly, and when they encounter something that makes them question what's going on, it scares them. So they hide from it, and pretend it doesn't exist- and they never see the beauty of things as a result. They read some book written by neolithic sheep herders and think they know it all- the sekrit knowledge of how everything works. As if neolithic sheep herders would know that. The sekrit knowledge is what the scientists have- and they don't try to keep it secret, but you have to learn math to know what they're talking about, and we don't teach math very well. And so it goes.